Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/21285
Title: Cognitive and neural models of threat appraisal in psychosis: A theoretical integration
Authors: Underwood, R
Kumari, V
Peters, E
Keywords: Psychosis;Neuroimaging;Cognition
Issue Date: 9-Mar-2016
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Psychiatry Research, 2016, 239 pp. 131 - 138
Abstract: © 2016 The Authors. Cognitive models of psychosis propose that maladaptive appraisals of anomalous experiences contribute to distress and disability in psychosis. Attentional, attributional and reasoning biases are hypothesised to drive these threat-based appraisals. Experimental and self-report data have provided support for the presence of these biases in psychosis populations, but recently there have been calls for neurobiological data to be integrated into these findings. Currently, little investigation has been conducted into the neural correlates of maladaptive appraisals. Experimental and neuroimaging research in social cognition employing threatening stimuli provide the closest equivalent of maladaptive appraisal in psychosis. Consequently, a rapprochement of these two literatures was attempted in order to identify neural networks relevant to threat appraisal in psychosis. This revealed overlapping models of aberrant emotion processing in anxiety and schizophrenia, encompassing the amygdala, insula, hippocampus, anterior cingulate cortex, and prefrontal cortex. These models posit that aberrant activity in these systems relates to altered emotional significance detection and affect regulation, providing a conceptual overlap with threat appraisal in psychosis, specifically attentional and attributional biases towards threat. It remains to be seen if direct examination of these biases using neuroimaging paradigms supports the theoretical integration of extant models of emotion processing and maladaptive appraisals in psychosis.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/21285
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2016.03.016
ISSN: 0165-1781
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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